advertisement
Sushant Rohilla committed suicide because he was debarred from taking the exams due to low attendance; a process that is often arbitrary. While certain professors from Amity IP can be charged for being whimsical and arbitrary, the institution cannot be accused for abetment of suicide.
In all fairness, it should only be viewed as a trigger, or the straw that broke the camel’s back, and nothing else.
The decision to end one’s life is usually one that is thought out and is a result of a large, festering wound. Sushant’s decision could stem from a plethora of factors, invisible to the naked eye.
Maybe his parents didn’t teach him that school and college didn’t define him, maybe his friends did not placate him well enough or provide solid support, and maybe this decision is coming from someplace totally unconnected with college (read: love, family, self doubt, religion)
Individuals, especially young adults, often find themselves clinically depressed. Suicide is not a ‘weak’ choice, but it is often perceived to be a ‘last resort’.
LSR, Stephen’s and JMC, which can be seen as qualitatively better institutions than institutions with even lower attendance requirements, often debar students from sitting for their exams when they don’t make the 66.6% cut.
How do teachers reinforce the importance of attendance? Through fear, of course.
In any institution that has attendance requirements, teachers can be heard saying things like “you are not getting your admit card”, “I’m going to make sure you repeat a year” and “you do know that I have the power to mark your internal projects”.
Absolutely not.
When Christ University, Bangalore strictly standardises attendance requirements, people scream for differential treatment for different cases. But why should skipping college to play a tournament be prioritised over not attending college because perhaps writing in bed is important to one?
College authorities are stuck between a rock and a hard place.
A student protest is often a form of stalling classes and an excuse to bash teachers. The students of universities are using this case to ensure that the university doesn’t bar students, at least for a few more years, because they are so scarred after this incident.
A constructive dialogue between students and teachers from all institutions must be undertaken, to create spaces for communication and grievance redressal.
The system needs to be fought at every level. Students need to demand for either a no-attendance policy, or put forth a concrete objective system the institution can undertake. Jobs and employers should seek to understand a candidate more holistically, and schools from the primary level must instil a belief in the self.
Parents should avoid putting pressure on their children, and equip them to fight social pressure. Mental health should be given due importance.
Only with all of this, #JusticeforSushant will be achieved. But till then, everyone from his preschool, to his high school teachers, to Amity IP, to his friends and fellow mooters, to prospective employers and finally, the larger society unconnected with him, must be blamed for his death.
(This is a personal blog and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)